Gioia Tauro
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Comune di Gioia Tauro | |
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Municipal coat of arms |
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Country | Italy |
Region | Calabria |
Province | Reggio Calabria (RC) |
Area | 38 km² (15 sq mi) |
Population | |
- Total | 18,483 |
- Density | 486/km² (1,259/sq mi) |
Time zone | CET, UTC+1 |
Coordinates | |
Gentilic | Gioiesi |
Dialing code | 0966 |
Postal code | 89013 |
Patron | St. Hyppolite |
- Day | August 13 |
Website: www.comune.gioiatauro.rc.it |
Gioia Tauro is a comune (municipality) in the province of Reggio Calabria, in Calabria (Italy). It has an important port.
Contents |
[edit] Winds
- Sirocco, a hot dry wind originating in the desert of Sahara (from South-East);
- Libeccio, very dangerous for shippers (to be avoided - from South-West);
- Mistral (Ponente), the predominant and quiet wind (from North-West).
[edit] Gioia Tauro seaport
The seaport is the largest in Italy and the seventh largest container port in Europe,[1] with a 2007 throughput of 3.7 million TEU's[2] from more than 3,000 ships.
The seaport represents more than a third (2002) of the whole national traffic and is specialised in transhipment activities, taking the place of the Malta seaport as the node for overseas traffic from/to USA and from/to the Far East. The Medcenter Container Terminal (Medcenter, Contship) is the main operator working within the seaport of Gioia Tauro.
[edit] 'Ndrangheta control of port
According to a 2006 report, Italian investigators estimate that 80% of Europe's cocaine arrives from Colombia via Gioia Tauro's docks. The port is also involved in the illegal arms trade. These activities are controlled by the Calabrian crime families known as 'Ndrangheta.[3]
The Piromalli clan managed to condition the management of the new container terminal. Established in the mid-1990s, it became the largest terminal in the Mediterranean, moving over 2 million containers in 1998. Since 1994, when Contship Italia rented the port area to start transshipment activity and the Medcenter Container Terminal was set up thanks to 138 billion lire (about US$86 million) in state financing, the Piromalli’s aimed to oblige the Medcenter company, through its vice president Walter Lugli, and the Contship company, through its president Enrico Ravano, to pay a kickback of US$1.50 for each transshipped container, a sum which corresponded to about half the net profits earned by the two companies.[4][5]
In February 2008 the parliamentary Antimafia Commission concluded that the ‘Ndrangheta “controls or influences a large part of the economic activity around the port and uses the facility as a base for illegal trafficking.” In its report it said that “the entire gamma of internal or sub-contracted activities is mafia-influenced, from the management of distribution and forwarding to customs control and container storage.” The extortion of Ravano and Contship, was part of a project that “did not involve simply this security tax, which grew with the port, but also control of activities tied to the port, the hiring of workers, and relations with port unions and local institutions,” the report added. “It effectively eliminated legitimate competition from companies not influenced or controlled by the mafia in providing goods and services, performing construction work and hiring personnel. And it threw a shadow over the behaviour of local government and other public bodies.” [6][7]
[edit] Mafia infiltration of city council
The city council of Gioia Tauro was dissolved in 1991 because of infiltration by the 'Ndrangheta. In April 2008, it was dissolved for the second time for the same reason.[8] The town is home to several 'ndrine, such as the Alvaro, Mammoliti, Molè and Piromalli families.
[edit] References
- ^ World Port Rankings 2005. American Association of Port Authorities (May 2007). Retrieved on 2008-02-06.
- ^ Van Marle, Gavin. "Europe Terminals stretched to limit", Lloyds List Daily Commercial News, 2008-01-31, pp. 8-9.
- ^ "Bitter harvest", The Guardian, Tuesday December 19, 2006. Retrieved on April 7.
- ^ Paoli, Mafia Brotherhoods, p. 218
- ^ (Italian) Il caso Gioia Tauro, Relazione sullo stato della lotta alla criminalità organizzata in Calabria, Commissione parlamentare d'inchiesta sul fenomeno della mafia e delle altre associazioni criminali similari, July 2000
- ^ Gioia Tauro 'controlled by mafia for over a decade', Lloyd’s List, February 21, 2008
- ^ (Italian) Relazione annuale sulla 'ndrangheta, Commissione parlamentare di inchiesta sul fenomeno della criminalità organizzata mafiosa o similare (Relatore: Francesco Forgione), February 2008
- ^ (Italian) Sciolto Consiglio comunale di Gioia Tauro, Corriere della Sera, April 22, 2008
- Paoli, Letizia (2003). Mafia Brotherhoods: Organized Crime, Italian Style, New York: Oxford University Press ISBN 0-19-515724-9 (Review by Klaus Von Lampe) (Review by Alexandra V. Orlova)